Philosopher Reflects on Death, Atheism, Morality & Meaning | Alex O’Connor

Today we are joined by the Cosmic Skeptic, Alex O'Connor, for a fascinating look into philosophy, atheism, and the pursuit of an ethical life. Alex has gained recognition for his unique perspective on reality, which he interprets through the lenses of materialism and agnosticism. This makes for an intriguing conversation as André and him engage in a deep dive into various topics.
The discussion revolves around their viewpoints on God, religion, consciousness, and morality. They dissect the potential dangers of intellectualizing and its impact on our understanding of the world. Furthermore, they tackle an interesting question: can the study of ethics lead to an individual becoming more ethical in their actions?
Alex also shares his thoughts on near death experiences, artificial intelligence, and facing the fear of death.
André's Book Recommendations: www.knowthyself.one/books
___________
Timecodes:
0:00 Intro
1:36 What it Means to Live a "Good" Life
5:37 Defining Meaning and Purpose
9:34 What Makes Something Bad or Good
14:15 The Balance of Open Mindedness
16:03 Atheism & Theism: Where's the Line?
18:30 Is God Dead? Being an Agnostic vs Atheist
21:10 The Ignorance of Belief
24:35 Distinguishing Between Wisdom & Knowledge
30:35 What is God?
34:41 How Studying Theology Changed Alex's Perspective
39:53 Religon & Tribalism: Why We're Afraid of Opposing Opinions
45:35 What It Looks Like to Live Ethically
49:44 The Danger of Over-Intellectualizing
58:37 Materialism Facing off with Consciousness
1:03:09 Are Near Death Experiences Real?
1:08:38 Why The Fear of Death is Valuable
1:24:09 The Ethics of Artificial Intelligence
1:26:38 Why He's Changed His Mind on Consciousness
1:28:18 Making the Most of Our Lives
1:30:19 Conclusion
___________
Alex J. O’Connor is founder of the “Cosmic Skeptic” KZread channel, podcast and blog, platforms dedicated to the publication of philosophical ideas and debates in an accessible format.
A graduate of philosophy and theology from St. John’s College, Oxford University, Alex is an international public speaker and debater, having delivered addresses across multiple continents at conferences, universities, and local drinking groups, as well as debated ethics, religion, and politics with a number of high-profile opponents before college audiences, on radio talk shows and on national television.
Alex’s online videos have been collectively viewed around fifty million times, attracting over 500,000 people to subscribe to his regular content. He has produced videos with notable experts in respected fields, such as Peter Singer, Richard Dawkins, Bishop Robert Barron, and William Lane Craig.
Instagram: / cosmicskeptic
KZread: / @cosmicskeptic
Website: cosmicskeptic.com
___________
Looking to Start a Podcast? Podcasting Course: www.podcastpurpose.com/
Know Thyself
Instagram: / knowthyself
Website: www.knowthyself.one
Clips Channel: / @knowthyselfpodcast
Listen to all episodes on Audio:
Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/4FSiemt...
Apple: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast...
André Duqum
Instagram: / andreduqum
Meraki Media
merakimedia.com
/ merakimedia

Пікірлер: 637

  • @twograves693
    @twograves6933 ай бұрын

    I'm so glad Alex O'Connor is finally being referred to as a Philosopher. Let's not kid ourselves, that's exactly what he is.

  • @BobSmith-lb9nc

    @BobSmith-lb9nc

    3 ай бұрын

    Correct. And he is not a physicist.

  • @arnoldvezbon6131

    @arnoldvezbon6131

    3 ай бұрын

    He is an idiot.

  • @FinnA07

    @FinnA07

    3 ай бұрын

    @@BobSmith-lb9nc ?😂

  • @Knytz

    @Knytz

    2 ай бұрын

    hahahaahah@@BobSmith-lb9nc

  • @mism847

    @mism847

    2 ай бұрын

    @@BobSmith-lb9nc He is also not a delivery boy or a truck driver. Imagine that...

  • @zelvisvoldigod
    @zelvisvoldigod3 ай бұрын

    What I really love about Alex is the fact that he can spit out soo much wisdom when he speak while still can maintained to speak it out soo eloquently without even a bit of stutter. And he just 24. Wonder how great his mind can be in the next in the next 15- 20 years. Keep going on growing Alex. Our society need great thinker like you. 🎉🎉

  • @TalentedLMT

    @TalentedLMT

    2 ай бұрын

    I agree with your sentiments. I remember following him on KZread several years ago, when he was still in his teens, and even then he was borderline brilliant.

  • @NeutralMjolkHotel
    @NeutralMjolkHotel3 ай бұрын

    Love this interview streak Alex is on currently. I swear I’ve heard him talk about ethical emotivism, theory of knowledge, and death denialism 1000 times in the past month but it’s always captivating and thought-provoking.

  • @whoaitstiger
    @whoaitstiger3 ай бұрын

    I love how legitimately deadpan hilarious some of the stuff Alex says is, especially these comically violent thought experiments.

  • @NeutralMjolkHotel

    @NeutralMjolkHotel

    3 ай бұрын

    The thought of Alex walking into an operating theatre and crushing the brain of a patient on death’s doorstep. Not an image I was expecting to imagine.

  • @whoaitstiger

    @whoaitstiger

    3 ай бұрын

    @@NeutralMjolkHotel😂

  • @masterdreamer1858

    @masterdreamer1858

    2 ай бұрын

    Comic Skeptic

  • @lauraj8429

    @lauraj8429

    Ай бұрын

    "I trust that you haven't poisoned me" LOL

  • @ashleysherlock5705
    @ashleysherlock57053 ай бұрын

    I listen to everything I see from Alex, but the second half of this conversation is one of the wildest journeys he's taken me on

  • @suchithsridhar8460

    @suchithsridhar8460

    3 ай бұрын

    I was about to leave half way through the video because it seemed like a one-sided discussion and the questions weren't pressing enough. However, this comment made me stay for the second half and I'm grateful that I did! Thanks for this comment.

  • @zorba9660

    @zorba9660

    3 ай бұрын

    Listen to “Freedom From the Known” audiobook.

  • @juancruzlives
    @juancruzlives3 ай бұрын

    I have grown tired of every youtuber. But Alex is a different case; he is really really interesting and pleasing to hear. I admire the way he presents his ideas

  • @dimitrishow_D

    @dimitrishow_D

    3 ай бұрын

    Nah he a hippie douche fake..I'm sooo enlightened...lol

  • @jillaroo258
    @jillaroo25826 күн бұрын

    Around 32-34 minutes, Alex pointing out that the “bearded man in the sky” image of God is not an accurate reflection of how religious people view God- this is what I love about him! There’s so much integrity in the way he approaches these conversations; he will not allow a glimmer of a straw man to slip in.

  • @danaskin5797

    @danaskin5797

    20 күн бұрын

    If you're shilling athletic greens, integrity is in jeopardy.

  • @SharedPhilosophy
    @SharedPhilosophy3 ай бұрын

    When Alex is talking about the urgency we should have when it comes to life, I completely agree and I actually am experiencing something like that currently. I'm going to be graduating soon out of high school and I remember when I was in middle school and thought that senior year is so far away and it'll be forever and now I'm about to graduate in 4 months and I'm realizing how much I took for granted. I've become much more grateful of being in the school and I've been using my resources within school much more like talking to my teachers or meeting new students. I have this sense of urgency to get better grades and do as much as I can and experience as much as I can before I leave this school as a student forever. There will never be a time in my life ever again when I'll be able to experience being a high schooler the way I am now.

  • @falsevacuum4667

    @falsevacuum4667

    3 ай бұрын

    You're doing well just thinking this way at your age. Most people don't realize this when they're 18. More like 30 they finally get it.

  • @Jonny-wt3rg

    @Jonny-wt3rg

    2 ай бұрын

    30? People don't get shit their whole lives. I know dozens of 40+ yo people that haven't had a deep thought thier entire lives. I, too, used to think adults understand certain things in life. Adults are just still lost todlers that haven't learned anything

  • @tamiaj851
    @tamiaj8513 ай бұрын

    Such an interesting conversation! Only half way through watching and thoroughly enjoying the collision of logic and intuition from both Alex & André. Another safe, wholesomely curious and joyful container held for learning, growth, healing and expansion 🤍Thank you for the myriad of lenses you bless us with the opportunity to see from!

  • @GospodinStanoje
    @GospodinStanoje3 ай бұрын

    I've listened all of the recent podcasts Alex has been visiting, but I would say this was the most interesting. The consciousness part from around 55m until 1h 10m was fascinating and thought-provoking. Thank you to both.

  • @OldEnglandCathedral
    @OldEnglandCathedral3 ай бұрын

    That zoom out shot was wild, I did not expect the homie set on the chair yoga style

  • @y5mgisi
    @y5mgisi3 ай бұрын

    I'm 37. I'm much different now than when I was 27. I have high hopes that Alex will have even more great thoughts as he gets older. Great interview.

  • @jamesdettmann94

    @jamesdettmann94

    3 ай бұрын

    He'll be known as Alexander the Great.

  • @TalentedLMT

    @TalentedLMT

    2 ай бұрын

    I think your hopes will be proved correct in time.

  • @JJBerthume
    @JJBerthume3 ай бұрын

    Never expected you'd have him on here, been a fan of both of y'all for years!!

  • @marishasveganworld2240
    @marishasveganworld22403 ай бұрын

    Love the conversation! I’ve been following Alex for so long and I am always really excited for videos like this, thank you! 🖤

  • @IsaacAsimov1992
    @IsaacAsimov19922 ай бұрын

    Alex is on the top rung of my Great KZread Discoveries ladder.

  • @DahshonPugh-iq1bd
    @DahshonPugh-iq1bd3 ай бұрын

    This is amazingly insightful. I felt wisdom and electricity from the compassion and kindness here. Thanks for the information; Super informative and inspiring.

  • @IsaacAsimov1992

    @IsaacAsimov1992

    2 ай бұрын

    Lovely heartwarming comment.

  • @thezieg
    @thezieg3 ай бұрын

    Outstanding work interviewing one of our better exponents of the Internet.

  • @mokeboi3328
    @mokeboi33283 ай бұрын

    Great chat. Alex is streets above all other philospohers. He is holds his great interlect with humilty and grace.

  • @jenniferjoyner112

    @jenniferjoyner112

    3 ай бұрын

    I would agree

  • @JHeb_
    @JHeb_3 ай бұрын

    Alex, I wish you would make content on the philosophy of consciousness. This is a really interesting topic.

  • @smilloww2095

    @smilloww2095

    3 ай бұрын

    He has a few podcast epidsodes on this topic. At least 2.

  • @skepticalbutopen4620
    @skepticalbutopen46202 ай бұрын

    When I see a video with Alex, I know it’s going to be an interesting conversation.

  • @user-xi4jw4mh7p
    @user-xi4jw4mh7p3 ай бұрын

    Dear Andre, thank you for all the time and effort you put into these interviews. You are changing lives! May I ask for a request…. Would you consider interviewing Daryl Anka (Bashar), and perhaps going deeper than other interviewers do?.. because I find you are the absolute best at that. Thank you once again, and a big virtual hug from Denmark.

  • @nicoladisvevia
    @nicoladisvevia3 ай бұрын

    I'm glad to hear that Alex is getting away from the limited intellectual approach to reality that seemed to be so dominant and is beginning to appreciate the value and mystery of conscious experience.

  • @russ4moose
    @russ4moose3 ай бұрын

    33:10 Thank you, Mr. O'Connor. You really give me some hope.

  • @brazilianyogini
    @brazilianyogini3 ай бұрын

    Great convo 👍🏻 Ive never known another definition between knowledge and wisdom but that knowledge is acquired through theory and wisdom is acquired through experience.

  • @davidalanmors3233
    @davidalanmors32333 ай бұрын

    Thank you for another fascinating talk to process and in which to find wisdom.

  • @KHitten88
    @KHitten883 ай бұрын

    Most of the time it’s hard for me to take in what Alex talks about- I feel like it’s so over my head. Regardless I could listen to him talk all day.

  • @AliciatheCho
    @AliciatheCho3 ай бұрын

    I’d be interested in Alex’s take on Jung in terms of religion. Whether religion is true literally or not doesn’t negate that people have an innate desire to revere that which we feel greater than ourselves.

  • @robertjsmith
    @robertjsmith2 ай бұрын

    Andre is a good interviewer,his level of knowing

  • @MourningCoffeeMusic
    @MourningCoffeeMusic3 ай бұрын

    Wild ! I used to watch Alex’s channel all the time back in the 2010’s during my atheism arc. Incredibly insightful conversation 😌

  • @GospodinStanoje

    @GospodinStanoje

    3 ай бұрын

    Me too! He is one of the best speakers and philosophers in the world in my opinion. Quick question - You said "during my atheism arc.", are you still an atheist?

  • @Soint
    @Soint3 ай бұрын

    looking forward of you both getting more in depth about ethics in animal suffering and rights

  • @x2mars
    @x2mars3 ай бұрын

    Excellent audio!

  • @cdespejo
    @cdespejo3 ай бұрын

    Great interview!

  • @omargarcia1904
    @omargarcia190420 күн бұрын

    Wow, that terminal diagnosis thought experiment at the end was powerful to say the least! Good stuff Alex!

  • @chipkyle5428
    @chipkyle54283 ай бұрын

    So here's a thought experiment, Alex: Close your eyes. Breathe in deeply and exhale. That breath, the breath you took before it, and every breath you will ever take is because your ancestors were successfully tribal and carnivorous. But be not embarrassed. My reality and yours is personal, proximal, and present (temporal). Born into Jim Crow, educated during the Civil Rights struggle and Vietnam, now 75 with my annual wellness appointment looming next week, I can't count the "epiphanies" I've had. I hope my internist will give me "the 20 more years bad news report" (lol), so that I may have many more breaths and profound revelations. Keep up the good work; both of you. This was a wonderful interview. I am going to watch it again!

  • @zencat17
    @zencat173 ай бұрын

    Refreshing conversation, philo's Sophia meets minds willing to lay it all out neutrally on the table. I see wisdom as the embodiment of the insights/knowledge obtained, without the embodiment, knowledge is just a set of facts that are not 'lived' to their fullness.

  • @stranger2Utube
    @stranger2Utube2 ай бұрын

    Great one André!

  • @MrMurph73
    @MrMurph733 ай бұрын

    Love this. Im DYING to see the podcast episode between Alex and Sam Harris

  • @whoaitstiger

    @whoaitstiger

    3 ай бұрын

    I would love to see him with either Sam Harris or Bernado Kastrup.

  • @Antidoton

    @Antidoton

    18 күн бұрын

    It wouldn't last long or it would and make zero sense

  • @saraswati999
    @saraswati9993 ай бұрын

    Brilliant person thank you from inviting scholar to your channel, Alex brings logic to the table.

  • @LittleMAC78
    @LittleMAC783 ай бұрын

    From a non academic standpoint, having read non of the literature on the subject, it seems fairly intuitive to me that our primary drive is one of self preservation (with added pursuit of pleasure whenever possible). To my mind, morality, tribalism (collaboration to ensure individual survival which leads to the need to protect each other to ensure that continued collaboration) and fear of death (the inescapable end to that preservation) can all be explained as extensions of this concept. As I mentioned, I'm a non academic so I am quite happy for somebody to explain where I'm going wrong with that basic outlook of the questions posed.

  • @zootsoot2006

    @zootsoot2006

    3 ай бұрын

    What about people who do the s word?

  • @LittleMAC78

    @LittleMAC78

    3 ай бұрын

    @@zootsoot2006 which S word?

  • @zootsoot2006

    @zootsoot2006

    3 ай бұрын

    Unaliving yourself@@LittleMAC78

  • @danzwku
    @danzwku3 ай бұрын

    7:15 maybe it's less about actually creating the meaning intrinsically, but creating the narrative we tell ourselves 24:50 practical and experienced knowledge

  • @AhmadSammy
    @AhmadSammy2 ай бұрын

    I love Alex so much

  • @JackieJiddo
    @JackieJiddo3 ай бұрын

    The mind of a philosopher never looses its hunger, but maybe it's more like a dog chasing its tail than a problem solving enquiry.. All the love though 💚

  • @96lucasb

    @96lucasb

    3 ай бұрын

    Haha good one. Materialist philsophers surely this is true

  • @SuperChimcham

    @SuperChimcham

    3 ай бұрын

    I think it’s more like- the dog thinks of and tries different ways to catch his tail even though it’s impossible.

  • @exaucemayunga22

    @exaucemayunga22

    3 ай бұрын

    It's better than believing that the tail is a device created by aliens and they'll torture the dog if it didn't cath the tail.

  • @aaronclarke1434

    @aaronclarke1434

    3 ай бұрын

    Philosophy is the art of dead ends and going around in circles.

  • @jesterc.6763

    @jesterc.6763

    3 ай бұрын

    .​@exaucemayunga22 I love this answer.

  • @oliverjamito9902
    @oliverjamito99023 ай бұрын

    Thank you my HEIRS Alex and Andre for attending...unto our OWN! Love ye both too! The I AM said if ye LOVE ME! ATTEND unto my Sheep our OWN. Gratitude and Honor my Heirs! Likewise share thy shared "i: AM unto all the Who am I?

  • @michael_leclezio

    @michael_leclezio

    3 ай бұрын

    What drugs are you on?

  • @oliverjamito9902

    @oliverjamito9902

    3 ай бұрын

    @michaelleclezio6096 my beloved, the knowledge of God is FOOLISHNESS UNTO THEM WHO ARE PERISHING! Unfamiliar ways of speaking unto many but yet is Clear as water unto Whom BELONGS? Love you beloved without shame but with boldness!

  • @economichitman
    @economichitman3 ай бұрын

    Everyone put your mind energy into giving this man the personal experience of the creator he wants. ❤

  • @devinl8487
    @devinl8487Ай бұрын

    It's the application of your knowledge. Maya Angelou said something like, 'when you know better, you do better' but some people can learn something but choose not to change, especially if they don't think it's better.

  • @lauraj8429
    @lauraj8429Ай бұрын

    16:00 I put on an atheist hat as a christian, and now I'm an atheist. Glad I looked at things critically

  • @wessexexplorer
    @wessexexplorer3 ай бұрын

    11:00 watching Alex age and seeing his experiences change his attitudes is something many young people should note. It’s not only that one changes as we age, we change in ways that older people understand the young will go through, which is why older people will often ignore younger people.

  • @cinthyalc1162
    @cinthyalc11622 ай бұрын

    BIG TIME CHILLS THIS MENTALITY SHOULD BE GIVEN MORE SPACE IN THE MAINSTREAM MEDIA !!!!!

  • @epasato
    @epasato3 ай бұрын

    One thought about the interaction problem - the fact that if you change the brain, you change your experience of consciousness (whether through injury, drugs, electrical stimulation, etc) - one counterargument to this being a counterargument is that the brain could be more like an antenna than a jar. Rather than consciousness being "in" the brain, consciousness could potentially be out there in the entire universe, and our brains are simply antennae that pick up a certain wavelength / frequency. So certainly materialism is real there is the sense that the antennae has to be working to receive the signal, and damage to the antennae or a rewiring of it would mean the signal would be received in a different manner - but it doesn't necessarily mean that the signal itself comes from the brain.

  • @RobotProctor
    @RobotProctor3 ай бұрын

    I think wisdom is something like the sorts of knowledge that cannot be acquired alone by an individual within a single lifetime. It's the kind of knowledge acquired through many conversations between many people, over many lifetimes.

  • @ck58npj72

    @ck58npj72

    3 ай бұрын

    wrong, acquire by conversation, ffs

  • @berkah6240
    @berkah62403 ай бұрын

    Very good. I luv Alex!

  • @GinoNL
    @GinoNL3 ай бұрын

    Alex is one of the to-be famous philosophers of our time

  • @arnoldvezbon6131

    @arnoldvezbon6131

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes satan will raise his minions to the top lol.

  • @Antidoton

    @Antidoton

    18 күн бұрын

    Because he believes in the possibility of a god as a caveat to living a moral life

  • @arnoldvezbon6131

    @arnoldvezbon6131

    18 күн бұрын

    @@Antidoton there is no such thing as a moral life without God.

  • @3xrcodm

    @3xrcodm

    14 күн бұрын

    ​@@arnoldvezbon6131 There is a moral life without God. If you believe in Objective morality, why? Because it is nonsense if you ask me. All of the people in this world only based on their subjective morality. Even religious people do it even if they claim to "follow" the teachings of God because all people have different interpretations of his teachings. For me, conscience, introspection, and having the knowledge to know and be skeptic about what is right or wrong is one of the possible answer. Having your own moral code and always doing what is right is better than being a "good person" just because we're scared of the unknown being such as God.

  • @arnoldvezbon6131

    @arnoldvezbon6131

    14 күн бұрын

    @@3xrcodm Nonsense. If morality is not objective there is no morality. It seems atheist can't even understand what morality is. Always trying to go in to nonsensical pseudo intellectual self delusion in order to justify their immoral positions such as human sacrifice in abortions and theft in their promotion of socialism and fornication by constantly consuming porn. Back to bed son.

  • @feralhamster2429
    @feralhamster24296 күн бұрын

    I think the best part is “the danger of over intellectualizing”

  • @Conspexit
    @Conspexit3 ай бұрын

    Alex o Connor is definitely the smartest person on the internet

  • @user-wn1kq8jx5q

    @user-wn1kq8jx5q

    3 ай бұрын

    I hate fan-boying like that and never have before but I am continually more and more impressed with him. Been listening to him for about 2 years now and have literally consumed every piece of content he’s put out and has been put out with him… and my god man, he operates on a completely different level. He converses with the absolute best of the best minds in their fields and can match them and often times out maneuver them. It’s actually bizarre and amazing to me someone like Alex exists. Makes me embarrassingly jealous that no amount of school or experience would ever bring me to par.

  • @ck58npj72

    @ck58npj72

    3 ай бұрын

    we are all on the internet, but I'm stupid@@user-wn1kq8jx5q

  • @exaucemayunga22
    @exaucemayunga223 ай бұрын

    I think the fear of death and the uncertainty of what comes after it is what started religion.

  • @UncleDiogenes

    @UncleDiogenes

    3 ай бұрын

    Terror management theory would agree but I recommend you look up Animism, it helps people conceptualize the origins of spirituality.

  • @thechrisgeisler
    @thechrisgeisler3 ай бұрын

    Excellent

  • @julzjn5565
    @julzjn55653 ай бұрын

    Would love to see you conversate with Anna Brown :)

  • @saulkumpulaine5387
    @saulkumpulaine53873 ай бұрын

    I listened this in my bed for a bedtime story and founded myself sitting on my my bed with phone in my hand just listening.

  • @gabri41200
    @gabri412003 ай бұрын

    Particularly, i don't feel the urge to make any long-lasting impact in the world. For me, a good life is one in which i can experience interesting experiences while feeling the least amount of pain. Though some pain can be a very interesting experience. I recognize that once we die, our consciousness no longer exists, but i don't feel the rush to travel the world or make some great contributions to society. I feel like just living a nice life is enough.

  • @montanajace
    @montanajace3 ай бұрын

    Surprised! Found Alex in my atheist era, and found this podcast in my new spiritual era. Interested to hear how these ways of looking at life intermingle. Thankful this exists!

  • @ck58npj72

    @ck58npj72

    3 ай бұрын

    There is no future in Spiritualism, focus on ur direction, get good at it, and charge money for ur services.

  • @stormtrooper40

    @stormtrooper40

    3 ай бұрын

    @@ck58npj72 least weird sounding materialist

  • @nathanmiller9918

    @nathanmiller9918

    2 ай бұрын

    What leads you towards spiritualism?

  • @MarkSHogan
    @MarkSHogan2 ай бұрын

    Good is making most people happy while pushing the pile forward.

  • @JordanMillsTracks
    @JordanMillsTracks3 ай бұрын

    Used to be all in on the materialistic brain/mind world view but ever since seeing phillip goff on alex's podcast, the bit about picturing the colour red in your mind but not finding that experience physically in the brain (demonstrated with a triangle in this podcast), I had to instantly re-evaluate how i think about it (plus a few acid ego death experiences also had a bit of an impact haha), these days I'm leaning towards the idea that the concious experience itself has to be some kind of underlying fundamental part of reality

  • @slopedarmor

    @slopedarmor

    3 ай бұрын

    Ill bet u can find the experience of red physically in the brain.

  • @ahmetsaidalkur50

    @ahmetsaidalkur50

    2 ай бұрын

    @@slopedarmor i bet he would answer with then show me, that argument purely depends on intuition and ignorance

  • @pickle380
    @pickle3803 ай бұрын

    this is good stuff

  • @donaldmcronald8989
    @donaldmcronald89893 ай бұрын

    A clever man can get himself out of the situations that a wise man never finds himself within.

  • @geekexmachina
    @geekexmachina3 ай бұрын

    I suspect you would have to move your hearing down as well. I think one of my ex lecturers thought it is likely that the inner ear also helps us locate the feeling of being in the brain as its a major part of the balance system. If I remember correctly the retina is classified as part of the central nervous system.

  • @larrydunivin240
    @larrydunivin2403 ай бұрын

    I'm glad to see Alex on here. I've been "following" him for many years... from back when I used to debate him in my head as a fairly fundamentalist Christian, to now as I pursue a more fluid and meaningful spiritual path. Alex's mind has been opened considerably over the years, and conversations like this will propel him further. I agree with another commenter on this video...Alex is more spiritually advanced than he probably knows, and strangely closer to God than many religious people.

  • @exaucemayunga22

    @exaucemayunga22

    3 ай бұрын

    If God was real, I think he would reward people like him instead of religious people guided by ignorance and wishful thinking.

  • @larrydunivin240

    @larrydunivin240

    3 ай бұрын

    @@exaucemayunga22 God rewards those who seek him. AKA they have an open mind and a willingness to know absolute Truth. Alex is definitely further along in this direction that many religious folks. And btw...God isn't real...He is reality. It just so happens that reality itself is intelligent and capable of relationship...with itself. But the only way to KNOW that is complete openness, vulnerability, and surrender.

  • @bubbafowpend9943

    @bubbafowpend9943

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@larrydunivin240 do you think Alex doesn't fit that category? He's told of the lengths he's gone to to seek god, and... nothing. And yet, we are told all the time stories where god reveals himself to those that aren't even seeking. It even happens in the bible. Strange.

  • @Zazacollector

    @Zazacollector

    3 ай бұрын

    Supposed to be closer to god yet so far away, you should listen to Alex talking about divine hiddenness.

  • @Anubis424242

    @Anubis424242

    3 ай бұрын

    Depends on the god you're talking about. I'm willing to bet that if there is a god, they're a psychopath, in which case, Alex is leagues better than this demiurge that dumped this existence on us. Maybe if Alex celebrated animals eating each other alive in the wild, and endorsed slavery, then he would be very "close to God".

  • @markraines5155
    @markraines51553 ай бұрын

    I do believe in "Self"

  • @shaggysbiggestfan6750
    @shaggysbiggestfan675013 күн бұрын

    question for alex: couldn't the opposite be possible? you are so aware of your own mortality and how you could die at any time, so much so that it generates a perpetual anxiety that causes you to stop having experiences you would otherwise do? couldn't the suppression or subconscious fear also be a part of our evolution?

  • @robertjsmith
    @robertjsmith2 ай бұрын

    Wisdom is the end of beliefs

  • @Snuni93
    @Snuni933 ай бұрын

    It's insane how the vegan community had Alex O'Connor fighting passionately for their cause, and then just casually dropped him like hot garbage the second he had to take care of his own health... Mind-blowing

  • @monikasmithsonian2985

    @monikasmithsonian2985

    Ай бұрын

    It is a little bit complicated no? Like many people actually supported him (most notably unnatural vegan) and as a vegan myself I still watch all his stuff

  • @anzl16
    @anzl163 ай бұрын

    waiting on your book release man .

  • @sankiago
    @sankiago3 ай бұрын

    nonpropositional knowledge seems to me contradictory, very interesting words on this topic

  • @mikemccarthy6719
    @mikemccarthy67193 ай бұрын

    I'd be interested to hear more conversation of thinkers along the lines of Philippa Foot who used Aristotle's metaphysics to ground "goodness" in the nature of things. Good is what is proper to a thing as the kind of thing that it is.

  • @matthewvaughan1532
    @matthewvaughan153227 күн бұрын

    Fantastic conversation. For Alex, I was interested to hear about your views on AI sentience. It seemed that you were saying that we don’t do a fantastic job of giving moral value to animals, beings not like us, so we are probably going to struggle to ever do it for robots. I think we must consider that though in many ways animals are more like us than robots ever will be, on a certain intuitive level we may come to feel that robots are much more like us than animals, perhaps because they will talk back in our language but also because they will be able to ‘ape’ our responses far more convincingly than animals do. Also because of living our lives in such proximity to them. Even with animals, where we live with them, our dogs, cats etc. we are compelled to give them moral worth whilst being blind to the suffering of pigs in factory farms. Just a couple of thoughts on that 🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @davidbentley4731
    @davidbentley47313 ай бұрын

    Just on the topic of the imagining a triangle we can actually identify that experience through looking at brain signals. If we show someone a tree (for instance) we can now through an EEG and AI identify what that person is looking at. So we do know that seeing a tree generates an identifiable brain activity.

  • @DannyDiezel
    @DannyDiezel2 күн бұрын

    I’ve always saw wisdom akin to something like velocity

  • @johndepp-vz4yj
    @johndepp-vz4yj28 күн бұрын

    The chill fousey strikes again!!

  • @somersetcace1
    @somersetcace13 ай бұрын

    On the issue of "Terror Management Theory." There probably is truth to that, but instead of adopting worldviews that espouse an afterlife to deal with it, I've found that simply coming to terms with it and making the most of the life I have, has worked just fine. I have X amount of time. What am I going to do with it? To borrow something from a movie, "You can get busy living, or get busy dying." I choose the former.

  • @henrismith7472
    @henrismith74723 ай бұрын

    The apple vision pro experiment reminds me of this experiment where people were made to wear goggles that flipped the world upside down. After a while their brains corrected for this and they started seeing the world the right way up again. When they removed the goggles at the end of the experiment everything was upside down.

  • @henrismith7472
    @henrismith74723 ай бұрын

    Correct. I have zero fear of death and also zero motivation to "do things that outlast me" including having children. When I say I don't fear death that doesn't mean I don't fear agony and the suffering my loved ones would go through, but death itself doesn't scare me anymore.

  • @Anubis424242

    @Anubis424242

    3 ай бұрын

    It's the same for me. The only thing I want is to be receive MAID, but have zero access to it. Not only do I not fear death, but it's the only thing worth pursuing for myself.

  • @Jonny-wt3rg

    @Jonny-wt3rg

    2 ай бұрын

    I come to realize that wanting to have children is basically out of the fear of death.

  • @NeutralMjolkHotel
    @NeutralMjolkHotel3 ай бұрын

    Alex I know I’m not entitled to the insight, but I would really really like to hear some more in-depth thoughts on your current stance on veganism. I think it would mean a lot to many. Are you still leaning plant-based when easily achievable? Where do you think the ethical obligation sits now? Love your way of articulation so I’m sure many would be interested.

  • @archangelarielle262

    @archangelarielle262

    3 ай бұрын

    He wouldn't have an in-depth thought, other than hypocrisy and cognitive dissonance.

  • @experty84

    @experty84

    3 ай бұрын

    this!

  • @tobiasyoder

    @tobiasyoder

    2 ай бұрын

    @@archangelarielle262he’s a non cognitivist so anything goes…

  • @LuisPedro9
    @LuisPedro93 ай бұрын

    Sadly Alex passad away from poisoning… RIP 🪦 🕊️🕊️

  • @oliverjamito9902
    @oliverjamito99023 ай бұрын

    Unto all the shared "i" AM. Who are ye ALL? Thy shared "i" AM who love with patience, mercy, and grace! Judgment and Justice is Thy THRONE! Gratitude and Honor!

  • @stephenvankleeck4801

    @stephenvankleeck4801

    3 ай бұрын

    Unto the lone Oliver Jamito. Who are ye? Thy wonky comments doeth confound thy audience - in heaven above and the earth below. Savory spices to thee!

  • @oliverjamito9902

    @oliverjamito9902

    3 ай бұрын

    @@stephenvankleeck4801 my beloved remembering "YE ONCE BORN"! Beloved obviously comes crawling, to walking, and till now! Look at Thy feet! Why desired all thy feet without 1ST preserve...for Thy feet ye can call rest FILLED and delight. Through thy conversations given just for thee. Utterances will know Utterances. Utterances giving gratitude and Honor unto one another availeth much indeed!

  • @LegendaryMcslayer
    @LegendaryMcslayer3 ай бұрын

    10:51 if we change the script here and ask what if the person is sacrificing themselves for the 5, the selfless act of taking on suffering to increase the pleasure or reduces suffering is a good thing. If the five force the one against his will this is a selfish act of forcing suffering, so selfless vs selfishness is a determining factor.

  • @SeldonnHari
    @SeldonnHari3 ай бұрын

    Alex needs to read Douglas Hofstadter

  • @coolbreeze5683
    @coolbreeze56833 ай бұрын

    This is a great conversation. I think everyone's opinion on spirituality and religion are valid since it's a very personal thing. If you believe in a higher power, you're correct and if you don't believe in a higher power, you're also correct. It's meant to be a great mystery because various view points are what make life an adventure. I've witnessed things that make me believe in spirituality and a higher power. Other people don't witness such things or if they do, they will try their hardest to find a logical explanation for it by calling it fluke or coincidence. Things aren't revealed equally to everyone in the same way because then what would be the point of living if everyone follows one known path?

  • @Theactivepsychos

    @Theactivepsychos

    3 ай бұрын

    Holy books are the problem. If you lock beliefs for all time in a book they become outdated and irrelevant, even downright dangerous quite quickly.

  • @exaucemayunga22

    @exaucemayunga22

    3 ай бұрын

    It depends on the characteristics of that higher power and the reason for believing in that higher power. Would you say that people who believed in the thunder God Zeus or Marduk were correct? Do people who believe that we're in a simulation programmed by aliens correct? I wouldn't say so.

  • @anne20238
    @anne202382 ай бұрын

    Against utilitarianism: “you cannot judge any artefact except by using it as it was intended. It is no good judging a butter-knife by seeing whether it will saw logs.” (C.S. Lewis, ‘Christianity and Culture’). I believe that that green tea is not poisoned not only because of my background knowledge but also because I tasted it and lived. As in Christianity: a Chistian believes not only because of rational or historical proofs, but also because he tasted Life and now he truly lives. “We associate the natural side of our nature with the unethical side of our nature so it shouldn't be a problem to recognise that this is an unavoidable part of our biology because without that to fight against ethics wouldn't even be worth doing, there wouldn't be any need for ethics if it didn't somehow subvert we wanted to do anyway. So of course, anything we think is ethically worthwhile is going to have to be achieved in in the face of a strong inclination to do the opposite.” - if ethics is expression of emotion, what is the origin of ‘the unethical side of our nature’? What if my emotional preferences does not enter into contradiction with my ‘unethical side of our nature’? The ground for a system of values cannot be found in any appeal to emotion. “. The Chest-Magnanimity-Sentiment- these are the indispensable liaison officers between cerebral man and visceral man. It may even be said that it is by this middle element that man is man: for by his intellect he is mere spirit and by his appetite mere animal.” (Lewis, The Abolition of Man) everything ends in night (Boewulf knew it) - your Ego’s desires, the fame and all realisations. Ego must dies so that your true Self (in God) truly live

  • @tonygoodkind7858

    @tonygoodkind7858

    7 күн бұрын

    1. How is that quote "against" utilitarianism? 2. After drinking, sure. But then you're comparing it to Christianity. * We don't have evidence Christianity changes lives (more than any similarly-impactful idea, like every other religion) * We don't have evidence Christianity causes _better_ lives. (On several topics, we have evidence theists are _worst._ Less moral, etc. And sure, on a few topics like lifespan and community, theists do better.) * We don't have evidence of any meaningful relationship with an all-knowing being. (And let's face it "all-knowing" means we'd expect some absolutely amazing insights from people in a relation with such a being, yeah?) 3. Freud's "parts of the mind" is an oversimplification, but that's what explains your second quote: that different parts of the brain have different functions, different impulses, and "management" sides of the brain designed to avoid going to jail because you didn't resist the urge to push the person off the cliff.

  • @georgerevell5643
    @georgerevell5643Ай бұрын

    The mind is in the head not because the brain is there, but because the eyes that see the world from that angle, making you feel you you are directly behind where your eyes are looking at the world from, in your head.

  • @nosebleedmariah
    @nosebleedmariah3 ай бұрын

    Im 34 and this is deep

  • @sandeshbhatt9454
    @sandeshbhatt94543 ай бұрын

    André, you gotta help him do an interview with sadhguru 🙏🏽

  • @douglascutler1037
    @douglascutler10373 ай бұрын

    It's the effort we take to improve things that lives on. We take fire and combustion for granted. But somewhere in our distant past some proto-human took the time to think about the problem. They first noticed when they rubbed their hands hard together it got warmer just like the warmth from wild fires. Perhaps rubbing hands for warmth was a game at first, then a contest for warmest, then some experiments and trials. Perhaps some father got as far as making smoke with wood and then past the quest on to his children. But finally someone figured out how to make fire from scratch. And here we are today, their million year old efforts still benefiting our lives today.

  • @ashleydyer7200
    @ashleydyer72003 ай бұрын

    One perception of wisdom, absent assumptions of morality, might be the ability intelligently integrate knowledge, observation, and experience to make decisions in alignment with one's intention. Wisdom is not necessarily equivalent with benevolence.

  • @devinl8487
    @devinl8487Ай бұрын

    Christians are allowed to have doubt. They give the example 'doubting Tom'. Just because he had doubt, doesn't disqualify him as a Christian. Lines are drawn, labels are given for absolutes, but I wonder if those absolutes are unnecessary or unattainable?

  • @zeropointflow
    @zeropointflow3 ай бұрын

    so different

  • @tomgreene1843
    @tomgreene18433 ай бұрын

    Alex is more or less a materialist....that gives us a good insight .

  • @jirace
    @jirace2 ай бұрын

    I feel like when discussing a moral framework, there is a bit of a laziness that happens when we assume certain moral frameworks will be applicable and best across all scenarios all the time, whether those come from philosophy or dogma/religion. If we consider every issue using utilitarianism vs Kantianism (deontology) perspectives on either end of a scale, we may find some issues are best managed with one or the other, and sometimes there is a grey area and a need for debate on the issue, but not for debate on a moral philosophy that would guide the decision for the issue. This is where people are lazy and where we get into conflicts of ideology. For instance, the right is pro-life, so they are against abortion, but they also must be against IVF as it is practiced, so now there is party conflict on the issue; their dogma/moral philosophy informs them that an eleven year old who was impregnated by her rapist must deliver that child. There may not be a correct answer for what is moral in this case, but I find it lazy for people to fall back on religion or whatever moral philosophy they have and seemingly arrive at a conclusion before really teasing out the issue. The moral framework becomes less of a guide and results in intellectual laziness. We know most morals are framed in the light of harm reduction, and if that is the case then every issue is a dualism between utilitarianism and Kantianism. In Sam's moral landscape, his moral framework about reducing suffering by avoiding the worst possible misery for everyone seems to reduce things down to a utilitarianism just phrased differently. I think he is right that science can help people resolve a lot about what would be best for society, but I also think science won't know until it knows because it will never have all the variables and know all the butterfly effects, and in the end, there is only a certain probability the outcome will be better. For instance, science could say that we should stop giving money to malaria treatments and vaccines and just invest in a cure; millions will die, but billions in the future will be saved by speeding investment; we may not know if a cure is going to come, and we are willfully withholding aid from people now, which seems unethical, so how should we act? In research studies, if a treatment seems to be working then it is immoral to withhold it from the placebo group, yet it could also limit the quality of the study. This is all to say, situations are nuanced and moral frameworks will never be perfect. We can't just go on intuition. We have to always have a discourse and come to a decision together and be willing to change our course if we arrive at new information and willing to accept the consequences of our choices understanding that we are fallible.

  • @jordannewberry9561

    @jordannewberry9561

    2 ай бұрын

    How do you determine which moral framework is 'better' for a given situation?

  • @scottheshot1
    @scottheshot1Ай бұрын

    Much love with the exception of his ignorance of Greek. I know someone out there feels my pain.

  • @nyamsshonz6451
    @nyamsshonz64513 ай бұрын

    Different mindsets is virtueou

  • @jblopez19d
    @jblopez19d3 ай бұрын

    Praying for you Alex, that God meet you where you're at and touch your heart, Sir

  • @VeganSemihCyprus33
    @VeganSemihCyprus333 ай бұрын

    The Connections (2021) [short documentary] 🙏

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